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BBC On This Day | Front Page
BBC On This Day
Since January 2006
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Home arrow Religion arrow Hinduism

Hinduism PDF Print E-mail
THE MUSLIM MUGHAL EMPIRE 1526-1739
The great religions of Islam and Hinduism mix and flourish in the Indian sub-continent.

The Mughal Islamic Empire in India commenced in 1526 when Barbur, a descendent of Genghis Khan and Tamerlane, invaded the Sultanate of Delhi from his home in Afghanistan. Control was firmly established by his grandson Akbar who ruled 2/3 of India by the time of his death in 1605. (The English set up the East India Trading Company in Calcutta in 1600). The Islamic Mughal empire was then sitting alongside the two other great Islamic empires of the time:-
The Persian/Iranian/Safavid Empire and the adjoining Islamic Ottoman Empire all controlled by rulers of Turkish/Mongol origin (that is present day Turkmenistan rather than Turkey).

Art, architecture, trade, religious development and diversity all flourished under Indian Islamic Emperor Akbar and his grandson Shahjahan. Art saw a combination of Indian and Persian traditions particularly in miniatures, architecture climaxed with the building of the Taj Mahal and non Muslims were given freedom of expression. However two out spoken Sikh leaders, Gurus, were assassinated in 1606 and 1675. The tax system was improved and extortion was outlawed.

THE MARATHAS 1674-1800 HINDU
The Islamic Mughals never achieved total domination of southern India and in 1674 a Hindu leader, Sivaji set up a regional kingdom in an area north of present day Goa called Maratha. The economy of the Islamic north declined and in 1739 an army invaded from Persia (Iran) under Nadir Shah and sacked Delhi but again left no significant standing army. This enabled the Marathas to expand northwards and by 1800 the Hindu Marathas controlled Delhi and all of India north of present day Goa. Meantime an Islamic state called Mysore stopped any Hindu Maratha expansion further south than Goa. From 1600 onwards European Christian traders were setting up headquarters in India in the midst of Hindu Muslim battles. Eventually the Christian English came to rule the whole of India:-

400 YEARS AGO
The following pages trace the development of the English buccaneering traders who vastly outnumbered by the Indian indigenous population and European trading competitors set to establish the biggest empire the world has ever seen mainly through naval supremacy financed by a Jewish banking system.

1600 CHRISTIAN EUROPEANS ESTABLISH TRADING POSTS IN INDIA
The foundations of the British Empire and the English-India story.

The English ended up with the largest empire in the world, rather than the competing and originally more powerful French, Spanish, Portuguese or Dutch. The "Jewel in the English Crown" was India. How was this achieved when all of the above listed European countries were trying to do the same thing and at the time were more powerful than the English. France in particular, in the crucial years, was economically stronger and with a much larger population. (England 7 million, France 20 million.) The answer was the British Navy. At the end of the day it came down to a hundred year dual between England and France and little England won each key battle. (Not to be confused with the earlier 100 years war, 1337-1453, between England and France when the English tried and almost succeeded in retrieving much of the land in France which Norman English Kings had originally ruled but subsequently neglected.)

First steps to Christian world empires
The Americas were the first lands colonised by European Christians, purely by chance in fact, as the explorers did not know the Americas existed. They were sailing west to find new routes to China for silks and porcelain (china) and to Java, Indonesia for spices. The shorter routes east were blocked by the hated and feared Islamic Ottoman Turks from about 1400 onwards.

Spain was the first off the mark west, financed by the Christian anti Jewish fanatics, King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella, commencing of course with Columbus. (An Italian-Genoese but financed by the Spanish royal family.) The Spanish at this time were the most powerful nation in Europe but were barbaric plunderers, not colonialists. They eliminated the established cultures in Mexico and South America while they stole their silver and gold. The Role of the English was almost as barbaric, being "the pirates of the Atlantic". Hiding in the Caribbean, they high-jacked much of the stolen gold from the Spanish ships. (The gold from one Spanish ship could double the normal annual income to the kings purse.) The first colonising ventures of the English (who followed the Portuguese by 100 years) was the building of sugar plantations in the Caribbean using slaves as labour bought in Africa. Virginia in North America followed soon after, with people like Sir Walter Raleigh creating organised tobacco plantations (1584-89). At exactly the same time Europeans were following the sea routes discovered by Portuguese explorer, Vasco de Gamma, to India via South Africa and were setting up trading posts in the Indian sea ports when Indians were ruled by the highly sophisticated Islamic Mughals (from 1526) The British East India company was set up in Calcutta, east India, in 1600 and the Dutch equivalent in 1602.

For the English to achieve simultaneous domination of both North America and India it was the French who had to be removed from both countries. In fairness to the French, they had equal interest in land battles in Continental Europe, (France wanted to conquer both Spain and the German Austrian Hapsburg Empire) whereas as we have seen elsewhere on this site, after Henry 8th , the English gave up land retrieval in Europe and concentrated on keeping European Roman Catholic Christians at bay by building up a world beating Navy. The Dutch threat was removed when in 1689, the English asked William of Orange, the Protestant Dutch Grandson of England's Charles 1st to become King of England. After this period the Dutch concentrated their South East Asia efforts in Indonesia.



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